Rebecca Klein

Botswana Cheetah Conservation Project

Rebecca with sedated cheetah at Mokolodi

Town/RegionCountryCategoriesDate
BotswanaAfrica, Community, Mammals19 Jan 2002

Cheetah populations are declining dramatically.  With less than 15,000 cheetahs remaining in the wild, the species is now threatened with extinction due to loss of habitat and prey, a diminishing gene pool and human persecution. It is thought that some 12% of this world population is to be found in Botswana.

Being relatively timid creatures, cheetahs are mostly found outside conservation areas on large commercial farmlands and communal farming areas, where they do not have to compete with stronger predators.  However many farmers perceive cheetahs as a threat to their livestock and shoot them.

We are proposing to carry out a nationwide questionnaire survey to assess the status and distribution of the cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus), focusing on their role in livestock/predator conflicts. The results of this survey will allow us to identify priority areas, to which we can focus education and information programmes in non lethal methods of predator control, appropriate livestock management and encourage rural communities to manage their land through sustainable use of wildlife. We hope that the cheetah will act as a flagship species for the biodiversity of these areas.

Contact Rebecca at sanctuary@mokolodi.com and visit the Mokolodi Nature Reserve website

Project Updates

Read about the latest progress of this project in the report below.

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May 200322.5 KB
September 200321.5 KB
Further Information

Go to http://www.cheetahbotswana.com for more news of Rebecca's work including their first community veterinary clinics held during the last week of January 2009.

If you have a broadband connection you may like to take a look at Rebecca's new online project. This is an interactive presentation showing the movements of Nala, their cheetah which carries a GSM collar.
Visit http://www.cheetahbotswana.com/tracking.php and click on the Tracking Map link.

In the animation mode (and on the barchart overlay) it is easy to see where Nala had her six cubs. She remains in the same location for several weeks making only short trips each day. As the cubs grow bigger her travels increase.

2nd RSG Grant Awarded

Read about Rebecca's latest work http://www.ruffordsmallgrants.org/rsg/projects/rebecca_klein


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